The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, July 18, 1918, Page 8, Image 8
djePamtiergJIeraftr
Thursday, July 18, 1918.
SHORT LOCALS.
Brief Items of Interest Throughout
the Town and County.
The clubs rolls of the county close
on July 23rd. You cannot vote unless
your name is properly enrolled
on your club book. See to it today
"'" -inama ia on thl> P.lllh listS. I
tuttu )UUi uauio ta uu >??
Col. Dave H. Wise, of Aiken, representing
the comptroller general,
was in Bamberg Tuesday checking up
the county officers. Col Wise has
acted in this capacity for a long number
of years.
If your name does not appear in the
published list of subscribers to war
savings stamps, we would suggest
that you see your local committee at
once and have your name put on the
roll of* honor.
The Woman's Missionary society of
the Methodist church will be entertained
at the home of Mrs. B. W.
Simmons on Tuesday afternoon next
at 6:30 o'clock. The hostess desires
a good attendance.
Master Rufus Herndon, son of Mr.
and Mrs. H. W. Herndon, was carried
one day last week to the Baker hos
pital, Charleston, for an operation.
The many friends of the little boy
wish for him an early recovery.
Although there are three four-year
and one one-year scholarships to the
credit of the county, there was but
one young man to stand 'thse examination
at the court house last
Friday, Mr. Sojourner, of Denmark.
The congressional campaign in
this district will open today (Thursday)
at Baldock, when the candidates
for congress will speak at the annual
picnic at that place. A large number
from Bamberg expect to attend
the meeting.
The senatorial campaign meeting
will be held in Bamberg en Wednesday,
July 31. Much interest is now
attached to this meeting, since the
entry of the candidates for the unexpired
term of Senator Tillman. The
candidates for congress will also
speak at this meeting.
f
The Herald today is publishing a
. partial list of the subscribers to war
savings stamps. The other subscribers
in the county will be published
as the lists are received. ' A number
of sections of the countjr have not
yet filed their lists. They are requested
to do so at once. It is very
probable that in compiling the long
iists many errors have been made,
and possibly there are duplications.
~ tttiII Ko arlo/1 fft Of\TTt*r*t
XUC xioiaiu mil uu gii?u vw w*> wv
any errors that may be called to our
attention.
1 ? <\
The County Campaign. .
The last day for filing pledges for
county offices will be Monday, July
22, which is the day before the county
campaign opens. All candidates
should bear this in mind. Twelve
o'clock, midday, is the hour for the
pledge lists to close. The itinerary
for the county campaign meetings
follows:
Farrell's?Tuesday, July 23.
Ehrhardt?Tuesday, July 30.
Olar?Tuesday, August 6.
Denmark?Tuesday, August 13. j
Bamberg?Tuesday, August 20.
The excutive committee fixed the
assessments of candidates as follows:
Auditor and superintendent of education,
$25; treasurer, $25; house of
representatives, $10; county commissioner,
$5; j cotton weigher at
Bamberg and Denmark, $12; cotton
weigher at Olar and Ehrhardt, $10;
magistrate at Bamberg and Denmark,
$10; magistrate at Olar and Ehrhardt,
$5; magistrate at Fish Pond,
$4.
Candidates for county offices so far
announced in cards in The Bamberg
Herald are "as follows:
House of representatives?J. Caldwell
Guilds, W. L. Riley, John F.
Folk.
Auditor and superintendent of education?F.
O. Brabham, W. D. Rowell.
Cotton weigher at Bamberg?A. P.
Beard, W. M. Sandifer, Clarence B.
Free, D. K. Sandifer.
Magistrate at Ehrhardt?J. H.
Kinard, E. D. Grant.
Magistrate at Bamberg?E. Dick- ,
inson.
County commissioner, lower dis
trict?u. Li. uopeiana.
Left for Camp Jackson Monday.
Monday morning five white draftees
left Bamberg for Camp Jackson,
as the first contingent of Bamberg's
quota in the recent call for 76 men
from this county. The colored contingent
will leave this (Thursday)
morning for Camp Jackson. The
white men leaving Monday were:
F. E. Dempsey.
Leon McKenzie.
B. A. Morris.
Julius E. Crider.
J..H. Shaw.
WORK OR FIGHT.
Town Authorities Frown Upon Gentlemen
of Ease.
Get a gun, else get a hoe, shovel or
something, quick. It's here?the
work or fight programme. No longer
is it safe for the gentlemen of
ease to sit upon the old soap box at
the grocery store and carve out works
of art from the pliant pine, or debate
the burning questions of the hour
with other gentlemen of leisure.
The chief of police is now busy
serving notice upol the ought-to-be
fighters that they must get busy and
go to work. If they happen to be
within the draft age, it will be to the
front for them. If they are not with
in the drtaft age, but are able to work,
they will have to go to work for themselves
or for the county.
City council Monday afternoon held
a meeting and passed an ordinance
requiring every person who is able to
perform manual labor to go to work.
Cards were printed on which persons
reported to the authorities can get
the certificate of their employers stating
that they are not loafers. This
ordinance is one recommended by the
government in order to do away with
all forms of loafing as a war measure.
The government says everybody must
work if we are to win the war?anfd,
of course, we are going to win the
war; therefore, it is up to everybody
to work.
Inasmuch as there is no excuse for
not having a job now, the chief is not
arffin'ner verv much with anybody
about it. If they are not working,
the chief says he thinks he can secure
them positions, as the town and county
can use a number of laborers right
now on the roads and streets. The
best authorities say that loafing is
not healthy, anyway, and the chief is
very desirous of improving the public
health.
* Announcement Party.
A notable event of the week was
the party given by Misses Vera Wiggins
and Frances Guess, of Denmark,
on Friday afternoon, July 12th, at
the home of the latter, announcing
the engagement of Miss Ruth Guess
to Mr. Reynold Connor Wiggins. The
guests were entertained during the
afternoon at hearts-dice. Refreshments,
consisting of salad and ice
cream, were served by little Miss
Grace Wiggins. Immediately following,
little Miss Frances Wiggins
dressed as a miniature queen of
hearts, presented the guests with
double red hearts bearing the announcement
of the marriage, which
is to take place in September.
Death of Mr. George E. Crouch.
Private George E. Crouch, of the
three hundred and twenty-sixth field
signal battalion, Camp Wadsworth,
Spartanburg, a brother of Mrs. R. S.
Simmons, of Bamberg, was killed by
a northbound train on the Piedmopt
& Northern railway six miles "west
of Spartanburg at 8:35 o'clock Sunday
night. The fender of the front
car struck the soldier a terrific blow
on the front of the head and death
was instantaneous.
. The remains were brought to Bamberg
and interment occurred Wednesday
afternoon at Springtown church.
Mr. Crouch was born in this county
near the Springtown church. His
father moved away some ten or twelve
years ago, however. For several
years the young man had been living
in Texas, where he was a telegraph
operator. He was drafted into the
army from Texas. He is remembered
by many Bamberg county people, and
his sudden and tragic death is greatly
deplored.
To Study Labor Saving Devices.
The extension service of Clemson
college and the U. S. department of
agriculture will hold a farm tractor
school in Orangeburg on July 24 for
Bamberg 'and neighboring counties.
The purpose of this school is to give
farmers instruction in the use of
farm tractors and other farm labor
saving devices. In view" of the scarcity
of farm labor in tlfts section,
farmers are sure to need labor saving
machinery on the farm, and inasmuch
as our farmers have had little
experience with tractors and other
labor saving devices, it will be well
for them to attend this school that
they may learn modern farming methods.
Any further information concerning
this school may be had from
County Farm Demonstrator Floyd.
Houston-Bamberg.
Mr. Francis M. Bamberg, of this
city, and Miss Pat Houston, of Tunica,
Miss., were united in marriage on
Monday, July 8th, at the home of the
bride. After the ceremony Mr. and
Mrs. Bamberg left for a stay of some
time at Asheville, N. C. Mr. Bamberg
is one of the city's popular
young men. He is the eldest son of
Mr. and Mrs. G. Frank Bamberg, and
he has scores of friends all over the
county, who will be interested to
learn of his marriage.
Bought $2,200.00 Worth of W. S. S.
Gus Ximmons is one of the most
substantial colored citizens in Bamberg
county. He is thrifty and lawabiding,
and he backs his patriotism
with his money. Gus is a well-to-do
planter, and has accumulated considerable
wealth. Saturday morning he
came into the Bamberg postoffice, and
asked to buy some war savings
stamps. He then produced checks
for $2,200 worth?$1,839.20. One
thousand dollars of this amount was
for himself, one thousand for his
wife and $200 for his son, Alex.
Alex has been drafted into the army
and is scheduled to leave for the
training camp today. Gus Nimmons
has set an example worthy of people
j - - 1 3 i. ~ U/n
?wane aua coioreu?uu emulate. nc
does not talk very much, but he is
willing to put his money into the
hands of the government to win the
war. He is giving his son, but he
does not consider that giving his boy
is all that he can do.
All Her Savings in W. S. S.
Miss Maud Padgett, a young girl
employed at the Bamberg Cotton
Mills, pledged $5.00 when the canvass
for W. S. S. pledges was made
in June. She bought the first stamp
and paid for it, and then the next
week she bought another one, and
has not missed a week yet. She says
she intends to buy one every week
until January, if possible. She is
putting every cent she can possibly
spare in government war stamps. This
is a spirit that is to be commended,
and as soon as the people as a whole
get down to business like this young
lady, we are going to wind up this
war.
The Excellency of the Hun.
We have been stuffed full of talk
about Hun superiority. We still hear
it said, "the Germans are a great
people. You have to hand it to them.
Wonderfully efficient."
Mr. Harry Lauder, the keen Scot,
has thus punctured this bubble:
"What, then," he inquires, "has the
boastful Hun given to the world?
Did he discover or invent or perfect:
Gas? No.
Electricity? No.
Ike Steam Engine? No.
The Telephont ? No
The Telegraph? No.
The Submarine? No.
The Automobile? No.
The Airplane? No.
Anaesthetics? No.
Aseptic Surgery? No.
The Threshing Machine or the
Farm Tractor? No.
The Phonograph? No.
To which list might be added the
Typewriter, the Cash Register, the
| Telescope, the Adding Machine, the
I Sewing Machine, the Cotton Gin, and
a host of other things that have promoted
the welfare of mankind.
Still, the Hun excels in some ways.
For instance:
He has made war more astrocious
than any other human being since
the Red Indian and the Barbary PiMto
V
* M bV,
He stands alone, supreme, "wrapped
in the solitude of his own immensity"
in his bold disregard of
humanity. His inhuman outrages in
Belgium and Poland easily excel
what any Englishman could do.
His support of Turkey in the dastardly
massacre of Armenians could
not be equalled by any of the Allies.
He is far and away our superior
in breaking treaties, as with Belgium.
We couldn't do that.
In the matter of spies and their
dirty work he is a world-beater.
No Italian, Frenchman, Britisher,
or American can touch him when it
comes to fighting women and children.
He bombards hospitals, torpedoes
hospital and merchant ships, carries
the civilian population of an invaded
country into slavery, starves, mutilates,
and insults prisoners of war,
and in similar sneaking, dishonorable,
and cowardly acts of ferocity is
plainly our master.
He was the first to use poison gas
and other excellencies of frightfulI
ness.
He has the nerve, while doing this,
to talk of his Kultur, of the superiority
of German "civilization," and
of being the "superman." Granted!
Nothing this side of hell is superior
to him, in this line.
He is beyond us all in Egotism.
Englishmen are. a btt chesty and
Frenchmen and Italians boast occasionally
and we are not above blowing
our own horn ourselves now and
then. But our hats are off to the
Hun. Egotism is his. He wrote it.
We are poor pikers.
And above all, the Hun has re
moved God Almighty from His throne
and substituted Almighty Germany.
All the Ten Commandments are off.
The Beatitudes are piffle. Any crime
you want to commit?lying, stealing,
assassination, treachery, rape or mayhem?is
glorious, if it's done for the
Fatherland.
Yes, the Hun is wonderfully efficient,
in deviltry. That's about all.
And when it comes to that he
makes old Mr. Beezlebub grit his
teeth.?Dr. Frank Crane.
BUY STAMPS EARLY.
W. S. S. Pledge is Pledge to Government.?Don't
Fail to Keep It.
i The State War Savings committee
| urges that those who pledged themselves
in the June W. S. S. campaign
to purchase war savings stamps
I during the remaining months of the
year should not wait until the last
minute but should cooperate with the
government by purchasing the specified
amount of stamps at the earliest
day possible. That is, if stamps are
pledged for July, the subscriber
should make every effort to purchase
them in the early part of the month.
This will make the work of the postoffice
and agents easier, and will
- - v - .. . .
enable the State to mane a Detter
showing at Washington in the campaign.
The committee points out
that the pledges were made to the
government, and, therefore, all
should cooperate to the fullest extent
in fulfilling the pledges.
Bamberg Goes up in W. S. S. Sales.
The report of the State war savings
committee for the week ending
July 6, issued a few days ago, puts
Bamberg county 10th in total sales
in th ; State. This is decidedly the
best showing Bamberg has yet made,
having gone up from the 34th place
a few weeks ago. Following are the
figures for this and nearby counties
in total sales:
County. Rank. Per Cap. Amount.
Bamberg ....10 2.86 $55,715
Barnwell ....27 1.59 54,513
Hampton 33 1.26 28,394
Colleton 44 .36 13,163
Orangeburg 11 2.83 158,756
The following are the sales for the
week ending July 6:
County. Rank. Per Cap. Amount
Bamberg 31 .05 $ 970.50
Barnwell 26 .08 2,568.25
Hampton 27 .08 1,440.25
Colleton 37 .02 741.00
Orangeburg ..33 .05 2,880.50
Crop Estimates.
The bureau of crop estimates of
the department of agriculture makes
the following estimate on acreage in
cotton and the condition of the cotton
crop under date of July 5th for Bamberg
and neighboring counties:
County. Acreage. Condit'n.
Bamberg 52,924 86
Barnwell 116,591 85
Colleton 44,548 83
Hampton .. 43,135 83
Orangeburg 171,637 85
Additional Personals.
?Mrs. W. D. Trent, of New Bejn,
N. C., who has been spending some
time in the city with relatives, returned
home Monday morning.
?Mr. and Mrs. Alex F. Henderson
and little son, from Ehrhardt, spent
Sunday with Misses Sallie and Charlotte
Henderson.?Walterboro Press
and Standard.
?Messrs. Thomas Ducker, A. M.
Denbow, W. D. Rhoad and H. L.
Hinnant and Dr. H. J. Stuckey attended
the meeting of the Shriners
in Columbia last week.
?Messrs. D. W. Phillips, W. H.
Chandler, Allie McCue, and J. J.
Brabham, Jr., left Monday afternoon
for a trip in Mr. Chandler's car to
Atlanta. They expect to return today.
*?Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Rice, of Bamberg,
and Mrs. Tom Smith, of Orangeburg,
motored to Columbia on
Tuesday and spent a few days with
Mrs. D. A. Sandifer last week.?The
State.
A
?Misses Francis and Dixie Faust,
of Macon, Ga., spent several days in
the city last week with their father,
Dr. 0. D. Faust. They left in company
with Dr. Faust this week for
thp mountains *of North Carolina.
?Miss Harriet Coe who recently
resigned her position as postmistress
of the Langley postoffice and accepted
a position with the Southern railway
at Bamberg is very much elated
with her new position.?Aiken Standard.
?Mr. and Mrs. G. Frank Bamberg,
Mr. McGee Bamberg and Miss
Nell Bamberg left recently for Chick
Springs, where they spent a few days.
Mr. Bamberg has returned home, the
others going on to Eendersonville
for a few weeks stay.
?Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Bruce have
returned home from a visit to relatives
in Georgia. Mr. Bruce says
that the crops in Bamberg county are
the best of any he saw on his trip.
On their return, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
visited their son, Lieut. Edwin Bruce,
at Camp Sevier.
?Mr. George Fender, U. S. X., of
Maryland, is spending a thirty-day
furlough with relatives in the county.
Mr. Fender was recently operated on
for appendicitis at a naval hospital
in Maryland. His many friends will
be glad to know that he is now recoperating
rapidly.
Over 100,000 women are employed
in various capacities on Prussian
railways.
WAR SAVINGS STAMPS BUYERS.
(Continued from page 7, column 4.)
Eddie Williams 10.00
Clint Pressy 20.00
Edward Lebby 5.00
E. L. Frazier 30.00
Roily Williams 10.00
C. H. Holmes 50.00
Eugene Tobias 50.00
Belle Tobias 50.00
John Powell 50.00
Isom Tobias 50.00
Dan Peeples 2 5.00
J. B. Smalls 50.00
Geo Easterling 10 0.00
John Abney 100.00
William Braxton 10.00
James /Tyler 10.00
Letha White 30.00
Delilah Williams 50.00
Henry Williams 50.00
Maggie Thomas 50.00
Joe Johnson, Jr 50.00
Joe Howell 50.00
Willie Crawford 100.00
Aaron Riley 10.00
Brooks Williams 60.00
W. D. Faust 50.00
Ransom Stukes 25.00
Jack Stukes 25.00
S. B. Hicks 100.00
Robert Owen 50.00
Wm. Moncrief 50.00
Willie Brown 50.00
rr 5,. sn AH
Octlu i\cnucu> uv.w
Richard Staley 25.00
Ervin Johnson 5.00
Jacob Parler 80.00
Robt. Sanders 20.00
Elberta Sease 20.00
Jasper Staley 50.00
Wash Evans 50.00
William Wolf 10.00
Fred Ross 5.00
Sam Young 20.00
Alice Williams 10.00
Joh,n Sally 20.00
Ellen Dowling .... 15.00
Harry Jackson 10.00
John Smith, 25.00
Alex. Stephens 40.00
Jeff Glover 100.00
Sam Reed 10.00
Henry Atterberry 50.00
Rebecca Jamison 75.00
Hazel Downing .... 50.00
Thos. Roberson 5.00
Lucius Williams 25.00
Pluribus Williams 25.00
Judy Davis 25.00
Henry C. Guess 50.00
Philip Guess 50.00
Willie Sojourner 25.00 I
Bill Williams 25.00
Cape Stephens 10.00
James Milledge 80.00
John Sellers 35.00
James Banks 10.00
Lang Atterberry 50.00
Archie Coleman 25.00
Edgar Hartzog 25.00
Geo. Fields 15.00
Ben MqNeeley 10.00
I. Young .... 100.00
Russell Dix 10.00
Oscar Parler 10.00
John Milledge 50.00
Alonzo Thompson 100.00
Elliott Hightower 100.00
Jame3 Williams 50.00
Charlie Jeter 100.00
M. L. Odom 25.00
Josie Faust 25.00
Eddie Faust 500.00
Maggie Jordan 5.00
Wallace Carter 25.00
Queenie Williams 20.00
Henry Williams 15.00
Govan Rice 100.00
Lucius Holman 25.00
Giles Holman 25.00
Shellie Guess 25.00
D. D. Jeter 200.00
Carrie Middleton 25.00
Pink Jenkins ." 25.00
W. W. Tyler : 25.00
Sylvester Atterberry 25.00
Paul Harns 10.00
Isaac Odom 50.00
Henry Coleman 25.00
Willie Wroton 25.00
Paul Sojourner 25.00
Henry E. Guess 25.00
Ed Brown 25.00
Sam Robinson 50.00
Sammy Rice 60.00
Geo. Cain, Jr., 25.00
Carroll Guess 25.00
New Advertisements.
L. B. Fowler?Wanted.
S. G. Ray?Sheriff's Sale.
Peoples Bank?Statement.
J. F. Folk?Candidate's Card.
Bank of Denmark?Statement.
W. D. Rowell?Candidate's Card.
Est. M. A. Kinard?Citation Notice.
Herald Book Store?Thrift Stamps.
Chero-Cola Co.?Ask for CheroCola.
Bamberg Auto Co.?Fisk Non-skid
Tires.
Bamberg Banking Co.?Thrift is
Power.
Enterprise Bank?The Money
Question.
Est. Mrs. L. C. Dowling?Notice of
Discharge.
Farmers & Merchants Bank?Money
in the Bank.
Bamberg Banking Co?Perhaps he
May Become Insane.
Est. George W .Beard?Notice to
Debtors and Creditors.
Byrnes on First Ballot.
A thoroughly reliable citizen of
: Aiken county, who travels throughj
out this territory, gave it as his opinion
last Thursday that Congressman
Byrnes would be reelected on the
first ballot. This gentleman is in
close touch with people in several
of the counties of the district, and
his opinion is worth while.
The army medical department has
developed a mobile X-ray outfit for
use near the front, carried on a modified
armv amhiilftnPA Tt Ponsiats
of a standard portable outfit made up
of a Delco gas electric set, high-ten- -<
sion transformer, special type Coolidge
tube, and includes an X-ray table,
dark room, and complete set of apparatus
for the localization of foreign
bodies. Some of these outfits
are already in service abroad and
55 are in course of shipment.
Three Candidates Enter.
The entries for the short senatorial
term to succeed Senator Christie
Benet, appointee of Governor
Manning, closed Monday at noon
with the formal entry of W. P. Pollock,
of Cheraw, in addition to Senator
Benet, and Thomas H. Peeples,
attorney general.
Richards is For Blease.
At the campaign meeting in Walhalla
Tuesday, John G. Richards was
forced out from under cover, and was
made to declare himself, very reluctantly,
however, and he declared
that if he was spared to vote this
summer he would cast his ballot for
C. L. Blease for United States senator.
Thos. H. Peeples was called on by
W. P. Pollock at Florence to state
where he stood regarding Blease. He ^
evaded a direct reply, and refused to
commit himself. This was taken by
the crowd and everybody else to mean
that he is a Bleaseite.
Women stenographers and typists
are now being enrolled in the Naval
Reserve as yeomen.
Over 3,000 women are at work in
the production of gas masks at the
Long Island gas-defense plant.
LITTLETON COLLEGE^
Hot water heat, electric lights and
other modern improvements. The
37th annual session will begin September
25th.
Write for new illustrated catalogue;
also for particulars concerning
our special offer to a few girls
who can not pay crcir catalogue rate.
Address J. M. Rhodes, Littleton, N.
C.
MR. BISHOP WITHDRAWS FROM
RACE.
To the voters of Ehrhardt: On
account of the press of personal business,
I have found it necessary to
withdraw from the race for cotton
weigher at Ehrhardt. I find it will
not be possible for me to attend to
the duties of the office; therefore I ?
A MA M/N 1 /?/>* A AA A f fit A
<x lu iiu luugci a uiuuiuaic iv/i iuc
position. I wish to take this method
of expressing my thanks to all my
friends for their promised support. ^
BOYCE W. BISHOP.
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS.
t
All persons having claims against
the estate of George W. Beard, deceased,
will file same, duly verified,
with the undersigned, and all persons
indebted to the said estate will
make payment, on or before Friday,
August 2, 1918. G. W. BEARD,
July 15, 1918. Execfftor.
CITATION NOTICE.
The State 4 of South Carolina?
j County of Bamberg?By J. J. Brab[
ham, Jr., Esq., Judge of Probate.
Whereas, G. W. Rentz, hath
made suit to me to grant him letters
of administration of the estate and
I effcts of M. A. Kinard, deceased.
These are therefore to cite and k
admonish all and singular the kindred
and creditors of the said M. A.
Kinard, deceased, that they be
and appear before me in the Court or
Probate, to be held at Bamberg, on
Wednesday, July 31st, next, after
publication thereof, at 11 o'clock In
the forenoon, to show cause, if any
they have, why the said administration
should not be granted.
Given un ier my hand and seal this
17th day of July, Anno Domini, 1918.
J. J. BRABHAM, JR.
Judge of Probate.
NOTICE OF DISCHARGE.
Notice is hereby given to all and singular
the creditors and other per- **
sons, interested in the estate of Mrs.
Laura C. Dowling, deceased, that the
undersigned Executors of the will
of t'ae said deceased, will on the 10th
day of August, 1918, file with the
Judge of Probate for Bamberg coun'
* ? flnnl n nflrtlin tin Ct Q n H at Qfltfl
ty tlicil uuai avwuuviuq, muva u>v
time will ask for Letters Dismissory
as such Executors.
MRS. LINA DOWLING NEAL,
N. P. SMOAK,
Executors of the last will and testament
of Mrs. - Laura C. Dowling,
deceased.
July 12th, 1918.-8-8.
SPECIAL NOTICES "
Wanted.?Ten laborers at once. A'
Apply to L. B. FOWLER, Bamberg,
S. C.?tf.
Wanted?Young men from 18 to
40 years of age to fill positions of
conductors and motormen. Excellent
wages paid beginners. Apply to
A. H. ROBERTS, Supt. Transportatior
Charleston Consolidated Railway
and I ighting Company, Charleston,
South Carolina 7-25
'4~
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